3 APRIL 1869

Page 1

41,,* The Editors cannot undertake to return Manuscript in ail case.

The Spectator

NEWS OF THE WEEK. fpliE Volunteer Review of Easter Monday was marked by an I exceptional catastrophe. The weather,—which was so bad that the Volunteer Brigadiers dismissed...

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TOPICS OF THE DAY.

The Spectator

THE MEETING AT UMBALLA. W E seem to be managing this Afghan affair extremely well. So far as we can understand arrangements the precise object of which is studiously and wisely...

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MR. GATHORNE HARDY.

The Spectator

e co p n i s ll i a d r ere a ci nd b e y or in n a e n r- y sto of ne th o e f M il. C G on A s T er H va ° t R ives to H b A e R t p he Y. tru is their party. His Conservatism...

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MISS BURDETT COUTTS'S EXPERIMENT.

The Spectator

M ISS BURDETT COUTTS is trying to do a very bold, a very disinterested, and, as we think, a very beneficial thing. She has put up her own name among those of the candidates for...

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MR MILL ON ENDOWMENTS.

The Spectator

B. MILL'S striking article in the new (April) number of the Fortnightly Review on " Endowments " exhibits him in his ante-Parliamentary phase of protesting against doctrines...

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THE STEAM POWER OF PARLIAMENT.

The Spectator

I T is a dull week ; to members, politicians, and journalists a very dull one ; there is nothing doing ; nothing has been said ; nobody has made a very conspicuous fool of...

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CONFESSION AND PENITENCE.

The Spectator

S UPPOSE a crime,—like the Norwich murder, for example,— once committed and irreparable, is there any true moral foundation for the feeling which makes it a genuine relief to...

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A MOVABLE HOLIDAY.

The Spectator

T HE variation of Easter is one among many things which illustrate the tenacious hold which Hebrew ideas, and even customs no longer representing ideas, retain upon modern life....

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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.

The Spectator

FURTHER NOTES ON PROFESSOR HUXLEY'S "PHYSICAL BASIS OF LIFE." (To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR") SIR,—The interest aroused by this remarkable paper will be, I trust, sufficient...

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UNIVERSITY TESTS.

The Spectator

go THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTITOR:] SIR,—In a recent number of the Spectator you considered the evil effects of such a test as Sir Roundell Palmer proposes to substitute for our...

" CHURCH COMPREHENSION."

The Spectator

(To THE EDITOR OF THE SPECTATOR:1 Sin,—The short critical notice with which you have favoured my Letter contains several queries, betraying, I think, in some of the instances,...

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THE TRADES' UNIONS' FUNDS.

The Spectator

[TO THE EDITOR 01 , THE " SPECTATOR.") SIR,—You condemn very strongly the proposal of the majority of the Trades' Unions' Commission to favour the separation of Trade and...

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CHILD-WORLD.*

The Spectator

WE know no writers, except the author of Lilliput Levee, who mingle poetry and sparkling childish gaiety with such exquisite ease and in such finely adjusted proportions as the...

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THE LIFE OF SCHUBERT.*

The Spectator

Tuts translation is so carefully and so thoroughly made that we very much regret Mr. Coleridge has been at the trouble of making it. Not all the materials the author of the life...

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THE MYSTERIES OF THE OCEAN.*

The Spectator

Jr is not so clear for what class of readers this work is intended. It has been translated, edited, and enlarged from the French of Arthur Mangin, by the translator of The Bird,...

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THE LIFE OF COLUMBUS.*

The Spectator

A FRESII work from Mr. Helps' pen is always a distinct gain, awl we have read the little book before us with special pleasure, since it adds another link in the chain which is...

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THE MAGAZINES.

The Spectator

Sr. Paula is readable,—not very good, but readable. That habit of publishing novels as books just before they have been concluded as serials makes reading the later numbers...

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CURRENT LITERATURE.

The Spectator

Mrs. Brown's Visits to Paris. By Arthur Sketchley. Mr. Sketohleyor shall we say Mrs. Brown T—is as amusing as ever, but her reminiscences should bo read aloud in full family...